[concert] Berlioz, Sibelius, Rachmaninov: RFH 30.04.09
Friday, May 1st, 2009 09:40 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Berlioz: Overture, Le Carnaval Romain | Sibelius, Violin Concerto | Rachmaninov, Symphonic Dances: Philharmonia Orchestra cond. Hugo Wolff, violin Nicola Benedetti. With
ladymoonray,
swisstone,
birdsflying.
The Berlioz was cheerful, dancy, loud: it is not my favourite of his works.
Sibelius' Violin Concerto was amazing: passionate, dark, all that Nordic wind and forest and twilight, simple melodies with feathery barely-there sough of bass -- and Nicola Benedetti's stunning playing. She plays with her whole body. I hadn't heard this piece before (not live, anyway, though I'm sure I've heard recordings) and it had me rapt. Downloaded a Recommended Recording as soon as I got home, and it doesn't have a tenth of the impact that Thursday's performance did. It was rapturously received by the audience and rightly so.
I was distracted by odd breathing and glottal noises from somewhere 'twixt brass and woodwind. Sickly clarinet?
Rachmaninov's Symphonic Dances is a joyous piece: I hadn't realised it was so late in his career (1941). A distinctly American piece that reminds me of Gershwin, Bernstein et al. Hard not to listen for overtones of WWII -- Rachmaninov had been in America for over 20 years and America hadn't entered the war, but it surely coloured his thinking? Some passages almost direct quotations from Piano Concerto #3. The first movement, 'Noon', is one of the pieces that always lifts my mood. And the third movement reminded me of Sibelius, actually: Valse Triste. ('Harmonic quicksand', say programme notes.)
Hugo Wolff a very passionate conductor, unselfconsciously enthusiastic, almost a caricature. I am trying not to remember
birdsflying's comment about angry bees.
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The Berlioz was cheerful, dancy, loud: it is not my favourite of his works.
Sibelius' Violin Concerto was amazing: passionate, dark, all that Nordic wind and forest and twilight, simple melodies with feathery barely-there sough of bass -- and Nicola Benedetti's stunning playing. She plays with her whole body. I hadn't heard this piece before (not live, anyway, though I'm sure I've heard recordings) and it had me rapt. Downloaded a Recommended Recording as soon as I got home, and it doesn't have a tenth of the impact that Thursday's performance did. It was rapturously received by the audience and rightly so.
I was distracted by odd breathing and glottal noises from somewhere 'twixt brass and woodwind. Sickly clarinet?
Rachmaninov's Symphonic Dances is a joyous piece: I hadn't realised it was so late in his career (1941). A distinctly American piece that reminds me of Gershwin, Bernstein et al. Hard not to listen for overtones of WWII -- Rachmaninov had been in America for over 20 years and America hadn't entered the war, but it surely coloured his thinking? Some passages almost direct quotations from Piano Concerto #3. The first movement, 'Noon', is one of the pieces that always lifts my mood. And the third movement reminded me of Sibelius, actually: Valse Triste. ('Harmonic quicksand', say programme notes.)
Hugo Wolff a very passionate conductor, unselfconsciously enthusiastic, almost a caricature. I am trying not to remember
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Date: Friday, May 1st, 2009 09:16 pm (UTC)